“Extra’s” Ben Lyons headed down to San Diego for the
first day at the Con, where the “Twilight” frenzy began four years ago.
He caught up with Stewart and Pattinson, chatted about “Breaking Dawn,
Part 2” -- and whether they’ll ever work together again now that’s it
over.

Stewart told Lyons, “Oh
dude, we will work together again. And I'm not being coy, but sometimes I
have a few actors that I worked with before that I'm like, ‘We have to
keep doing this together’ and he's definitely one of them.”

Pattinson,
who has been writing scripts on the side, concurred. “I would love to, yeah definitely. There are
only like a few actors who can kind of get stuff financed and Kristen is
one of them… It’s so easy to cast her in things.”

The
two still marveled at the fan reaction to “Twilight” after all this
time. Stewart laughed, “Even after all these years, it’s weird. The
reason I love doing this job is that shared energy. This is the most
intense version of it I'll ever have.”

Pattinson added, “They never seem to change age as well. It's
so crazy. I didn’t understand it the first time I saw and I don't
understand now. I’m curious what all the people will do after.”

Rob's Interview with Access Hollywood at Comic Con

11:54 a.m. Is this the movie Edward and Jacob begin to
become friends? "We've always had that relationship," Lautner cracks.
"It's always been this complicated triangle and now it's a square,"
Lautner says. Stewart prefers to call it "A perfect circle."

11:55
a.m. Is it bittersweet to be done? "If you told me tomorrow that we
have to reshoot some scene... I would start vibrating, because I really
enjoy living in this world," Stewart says. "Even though it's kind of a
bummer to walk away, I look back on it with such fondness," Stewart
adds.

11:57 p.m. Pattinson can't figure out how to talk into the
mic...

11:57 a.m. How have their lives changed? "You start a
project to finish it. It's the really charged experience," Stewart says.
"Maybe it just affirmed my ideas of why I like to do what I do,"
Stewart says, adding that her mind has been changed about the ability to
do creative work without only doing indies.

11:58 a.m. Do they
remember their first impressions of meeting each other? Meyer remembers
it as "one of the most bizarre experiences of my life," comparing it to
meeting her imaginary friends. "It was exciting, because they all looked
awesome," she adds. "I liked his pants," Stewart says of Pattinson. She
laughs. "You were a kid when I met you," she says, looking at Taylor.
"Sometimes you meet people and you're like 'We should make stuff
together. We can do good,'" Stewart adds. The men don't answer.

12:00
p.m. What was the one new thing they discovered about each other? Meyer
loved seeing Kristen as "The New Bella." Lautner agrees. "Now she's all
of a sudden transformed herself into this sleek, sexy vampire," Lauter
says. "Getting to see Bella so powerful was like a dream for me," Meyer
says. Stewart agrees that she loved breaking New Bella in and seeing
what she could do.

12:03 p.m. Pattinson is asks about the
similarities between him and Edward. He struggles to answer. "I really
can't tell anymore," he says. Pattinson recalls meeting Meyer for the
first time and arguing with Meyer over what Edward thinks and feels.
"There are certain things where you don't know if it's *you* thinking,"
Pattinson says.

12:04 p.m. What are their thoughts on
"rebooting" the franchise. "I think it would be amazing. I would love to
say that," Pattinson. "I pity the person who takes over my part,"
Pattinson cracks. Stewart says that the ending is satisfying and sweet
and ideal and it doesn't sound like she's in favor of a reboot. "I would
be open to the idea. I'd be curious to see what it is," Stewart adds.
Meyer says maybe in 20 years and, but she adds, "It would be
interesting, but it would be so hard." Pattinson asks what Meyer would
write. "Bella's story is definitely told. It's final," Meyer adds.
Pattinson envisions a "Mr. & Mrs. Smith" showdown between Bella and
Edward. "I could totally rip your head off," Stewart laughs.

12:07
p.m. Pattinson is asked to compare Comic-Con when he first came to now.
"The first one was genuinely frightening," Pattinson says. "But you get
used to it surprisingly quickly," he adds. He compares Comic-Con to one
of the big premieres, but he notes that there's an element of "show" to
Comic-Con. There's some back-and-forth.

12:07 p.m. What do they
think the film adds for people who know the story? "Bill Condon is
really great with finding human emotion in the middle of fantastic
events," Meyer says. "I hope it doesn't sound like we're really
arrogant, but we do really cool things with the ending," Stewart says.
"I think Bill was the perfect person to direct the fourth book," she
adds, saying that Bella's human aspects are gone now, but that Condon
made sure that viewers had human things to hold onto. "He totally did
it, I think. We did it," Stewart says, noting that she's seen the ending
four times and "I cry every time."

12:10 p.m. What were the
physical demands? "I have really bad luck with my thumbs. It plagues me,
actually... Both of them are oddly shaped," Stewart says. "Any grimace
you see is probably real." She notes that everything about Bella's
physicality was different this time around. "I liked picking and
choosing what to use and what not to use. Rounding her out was fun,"
Stewart says, noting that she's seen the other actors playing vampires.
The voice was hard, though. She recalls asking Meyer, "How am I supposed
to sound like windchimes, you jerk?"

12:14 p.m. Do they have a
better sense of the "Twilight" phenomenon now? Meyer still doesn't. "All
of the credit does go back to the books and the characters this woman
has created," Lautner says. "The characters in the books are what these
fans fell in love with," he adds. "I think if you could definite it then
we'd be doing more of it," Stewart says.

12:15 p.m. Is it a
burden to be labeled as The Guy or Girl from "Twilight"? "The access
that we all have is ridiculous. It's the hugest compliment... Especially
if fans of the book call me The 'Twilight Girl' and mean it," she says.
"Please, pigeonhole me. That means I did it right," says Stewart, who
seems very at-ease. "The access and the challenge that we have ahead of
us... You couldn't ask for... Challenge is my favorite thing in life,"
Stewart says, adding "It's awesome."

12:16 p.m. A reporter asks
about the sex scene from the last movie and Meyer covers Foy's ears.
"The ratings, man. It's a tricky thing," Stewart says. "We're supposed
to have mind-boggling, other-worldy sex in 'Breaking Dawn 1' and we
really... this is weird... we tried to keep the first one sweet. It felt
like discovery. Nothing about this series is raunchy," Stewart says,
giggling, as Foy sits down the row laughing. "But in the second one, we
just wanted to be animals. They're not humans anymore. How do you do
that? We tried. They told us it was Rated-R," Stewart says before
becoming flustered.

12:18 p.m. Meyer is asked about the second
and third books of "The Host." She says she wanted to do something
different and didn't want to make it like "Twilight," adding that
"There's nothing coming out in that series soon book-wise." But she says
the movie is "beautiful."

12:19 p.m. The last question: Is there
one particular personal memory that they'll take away from this?
Finally Mackenzie gets to talk. "Every moment was exactly perfect. Every
moment was a thing I will cherish forever," Foy says. Apparently she
had a swear jar and got money whenever anybody swore around her. Meyer
says that one of her favorite moments was in the last week of shooting.
They all sat in a garage next to the Cullen house to keep warm and they
were all just together. Stewart loved shooting the wedding. Lautner
remembers when it started getting closer to the finish of filming and he
told himself to soak up every moment. "I'm glad that I did that,
because I do remember every moment up until the last day," Lautner says.
Pattinson remembers going to Brazil and finding themselves on a boat.
"I know! We're like the Kennedys," Stewart says. "That was pretty
symbolic of the crazy journey," Pattinson says, recalling frolicking in
the water in Brazil. "He's trying to not get his white paint on me, I'm
trying not to get my brown paint on him," Stewart says.